Lesson 34: Rationalizing Denominators: Mathematical Convention

No Roots Allowed Below

In mathematics, it is a convention (a tradition) that we never leave a radical in the denominator of a fraction. To fix this, we multiply by a clever version of 1.

The Process

To rationalize \(\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\), multiply top and bottom by \(\sqrt{2}\). \[\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} \cdot \frac{\sqrt{2}}{\sqrt{2}} = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}\]

Worked Examples

Example 1: Simple Rationalizing

Simplify: \(\frac{5}{\sqrt{3}}\)

Example 2: Using the Conjugate

To rationalize \(\frac{1}{2 + \sqrt{3}}\), multiply by the Conjugate \(2 - \sqrt{3}\). This uses the Difference of Squares pattern!

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

This "Conjugate" trick is the single most important tool in Quantum Math. In Chapter 4, we learned that the complex conjugate of \(a + bi\) is \(a - bi\). When we "Normalize" a wavefunction (Chapter 12), we multiply the complex wavefunction by its conjugate to get a real number. This process is exactly identical to rationalizing a denominator with a conjugate. It's how we "clean" the math to get to the real, physical probability.